For decades, talk of a shot clock has been at the forefront of men’s lacrosse.
A certain type of shot clock is already in existence – a 30-second period that stops and starts on an official’s whistle when the official feels the offense is stalling.
Section 11 of the 2017-18 NCAA men’s lacrosse rulebook states that “it shall be the responsibility of the team in possession to initiate and create a scoring opportunity.” If a team is considered to be stalling, the official will issue a stall warning, indicated by a visual “shot clock,” which then requires the team to take a shot within 30 seconds.
This “timer on” shot clock has been implemented since 2013, and visually since 2015, but this past fall an experimental shot clock based on possession was allowed with the intent to gather hard data and feedback from coaches and officials.
“People may not think we do, but we have a shot clock now, but it’s administered differently than an all-possession shot clock,” Willie Scroggs, NCAA men’s lacrosse secretary-rules editor, said. “I think there are a number of coaches that don’t like how the officials determine when the shot clock is going to be instituted. … Once you go to an all-possession shot clock, it changes a lot. It changes how the game is played.”
The NCAA presented two options, both with a 60-second period, to head coaches as methods to implement the shot clock in fall practices and scrimmages:
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Once possession was gained, the shot clock started and the team with the ball had 30 seconds to clear into its offensive zone and the remaining time represented how long it had to shoot.
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Once possession was gained, the officials handled the 30-second clearing count per usual and the shot clock started once entering the attacking area. The team with possession then had 60 seconds to take a valid shot.
“Most are saying what we’re looking at in fall isn’t what we’ll see if we go to it,” Tom Abbott, national coordinator of men’s lacrosse officiating, said. “The purpose was to get teams thinking about it and get coaches thinking about it. The idea came up in the rules meeting last August. … It served its purpose really well.”
Abbott attended several HEADstrong fall ball events, including at Hofstra, which used 30 seconds to clear and 60 seconds to shoot. He observed Hofstra and Penn State taking 28 seconds to clear, using nearly the entire time to substitute players, and then ran one minute of offense.
Similar to Major League Lacrosse, which implements a 60-second shot clock, the “unwritten law,” according to Abbott, is every team takes about a minute to generate some offense. Though he made an important distinction that “MLL is a different animal” given the lack of practice time.
Ty Halpin of the NCAA’s playing rules administration, as well as Denver coach Bill Tierney who is the IMLCA representative to the NCAA rules committee, then sent out separate surveys to gather feedback.
Halpin surveyed Division I, II and III head coaches, as well as officials, with a response rate of 74 percent or higher. At least 45 percent of those surveyed used the shot clock experimental rule in the fall.
When asked if the game needs a shot clock, 57 percent of Division I head coaches, 56 percent of Division II head coaches, 50 percent of Division III head coaches and 76 percent of game officials said yes.
Five options were presented in the survey for the type of desired shot clock:
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60-second shot clock upon possession including 30 seconds to clear,
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30 seconds to clear with a 60-second shot clock,
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30 seconds to clear with a 60-second shot clock and a two-point arc,
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90-second shot clock, or
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Other.
Of surveyed coaches across all divisions, 32 percent preferred a straight 90-second clock, though 42 percent of officials supported a 30-second clearing clock followed by a 60-second shot clock.
The NCAA survey included a wide range of opinions from those adamantly for or against a shot clock in general, or for or against specific times associated with the shot clock. Among some of the anonymous responses regarding experiences with it are:
"Positive, better than I thought."
"It was too quick to play effective offense. There was a lot of 'dump-in-the-corner' offense, which is terrible for the game."
"I liked the 30 seconds to clear, then 60-second shot clock. I think it kept the game moving quickly, took pressure off the officials for when to administer the shot clock, and didn't change the game drastically from what it currently is."
"Resulted in poor shots on cage. If the NCAA goes to a shot clock for men's lacrosse, it needs to be reset on shots, not shots on cage. This will ruin the quality of lacrosse at non-Division I levels. It will also increase the number of lopsided contests."
Read more responses here.